Work
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News
More of Your Paycheck Is Going to Pay Rent. Which Cities Are Keeping Pace?
Since the start of the pandemic, the average U.S. renter is working six hours more each month to cover housing…
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World
An Agonizing Wait for a Migrant Worker’s Final Journey Home
When the body arrived, weeks after the laborer’s death in a faraway country, it was almost 9 p.m. and the…
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Magazine
In Paris, an Apartment Built on Heirlooms and Wicker
IN 1953, THE parents of Benoît Rauzy, 53, a co-founder of the design studio Atelier Vime, moved into a timeworn…
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US
House Passes Bill to Avert a Rail Strike, Moving to Impose a Labor Agreement
The House approved a bill to force rail companies and workers to accept a pending agreement. It also passed a…
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Arts
Now Arriving: Yayoi Kusama and Kiki Smith’s Grand Central Madison Mosaics
Beach scenes, wild turkeys and fantastic abstract forms in glass grace the M.T.A.’s new Long Island Rail Road terminal, with…
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World
Flashlights, Fire and Ingenuity: Life Without Power in Kyiv
After months of repeated Russian strikes, Ukraine’s capital can no longer take electricity, water, heat, cell service or internet for…
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World
A top E.U. official proposes a special court for alleged Russian crimes.
Kyiv has redoubled its push to persuade world leaders to create an international tribunal to hold Russian soldiers and top…
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News
How a ‘Golden Era for Large Cities’ Might Be Turning Into an ‘Urban Doom Loop’
The last thirty years “were a golden era for large cities,” Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, a professor of real estate and…
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Food
The Willows Inn Closes After Abuse Allegations and Lawsuits
The world-famous restaurant on a Washington State island has been donated to a nonprofit, a year after a Times report…
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Arts
2 Years After Racism Outcry, Indianapolis Embraces Black Artists
As a museum takes its first steps toward diversity after an insensitive job post, a nonprofit steps in to help…